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Bank of America Ensnared in Legal Web Over Ocala

NEW YORK (
TheStreet) --
Bank of America's(BAC - Get Report) twisted legal entanglements related to the fallout from Ocala Funding brings to light the reverberations and complexities created by such special-purpose vehicles.

Deutsche Bank(DB - Get Report) and
BNP Paribas filed suit against Bank of America on Wednesday, alleging that the Charlotte, N.C.-based lender failed to make good on $1.7 billion worth of secured notes issued by Ocala. Deutsche Bank claims it is owed $1.2 billion, while BNP Paribas claims it is owed $480.7 million.

In another lawsuit tied to Ocala in August, Bank of America asked a judge to block
Colonial BancGroup from selling over $1 billion worth of loans held by the vehicle.

Deutsche Bank and BNP Paribas claim that Bank of America owes them money because the bank acted as collateral agent, custodian, indenture trustee and depositary for the notes. Bank of America claimed that Colonial held the underlying loans as custodian, agent and bailee, but that even when bailee letters were terminated, Colonial refused to return proceeds to BofA.

All of the lawsuits stem from the failure of Taylor, Bean & Whitaker Mortgage Corp. in August, and have been exacerbated by Colonial's seizure by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. later that month. The FDIC became receiver for Colonial, making it in charge of collateral payments. It sold some of the bank's assets to
BB&T(BBT - Get Report) later that month.

Ocala was created as a liquidity facility for Taylor, Bean & Whitaker. The vehicle relied on mortgage loans as collateral, pending their sale to
Freddie Mac(FRE). However, Taylor, Bean & Whitaker was delisted as an approved seller of mortgages to Freddie Mac shortly before its bankruptcy.